This disclosure describes various system and methods for monitoring photons emitted by a heat source of an additive manufacturing device. sensor data recorded while monitoring the photons can be used to predict metallurgical, mechanical and geometrical properties of a part produced during an additive manufacturing operation. In some embodiments, a test pattern can be used to calibrate an additive manufacturing device.
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11. A method executed by an additive manufacturing device, comprising:
conducting an additive manufacturing operation to build a test part during which operating parameters of a heat source of the additive manufacturing device are varied;
absorbing photons emitted from a build plane of the additive manufacturing device using an optical sensor;
identifying one or more scans of the heat source based on fluctuations in an intensity of data samples of sensor data recorded by the optical sensor;
determining an average intensity of each of the one or more scans based on the intensity of the data samples associated with each of the one or more scans;
generating a first correlation based on the average intensity with respect to a number of data samples making up each of the one or more scans; and
comparing the first correlation to a baseline correlation.
16. A calibration system configured to measure performance of an additive manufacturing device having a heat source and a build plane, the calibration system comprising:
an optical sensor suite configured to absorb photons emitted from the build plane during an additive manufacturing operation of the additive manufacturing device to build a test part during which operating parameters of the heat source are varied;
a data storage device configured to store readings taken by the optical sensor suite; and
a processor configured to:
identify one or more scans of the heat source from the stored readings based on fluctuations in an intensity of data samples of the stored readings;
determine an average intensity of each of the one or more scans based on the intensity of the data samples associated with each of the one or more scans;
generate a first correlation based on the average intensity with respect to a number of data samples making up each of the one or more scans; and
compare the first correlation to a baseline correlation associated with another additive manufacturing device or with the additive manufacturing device.
1. A method for calibrating a laser driven additive manufacturing operation of a first additive manufacturing device, the method comprising:
monitoring photons emitted as energy impacts metal powder spread across a build plane during a first additive manufacturing operation performed by a heat source of the first additive manufacturing device, the monitoring being performed using one or more optical sensors;
recording sensor data captured by the one or more optical sensors;
identifying one or more scans of the heat source based on fluctuations in an intensity of data samples of the recorded sensor data;
determining an average intensity of each of the one or more scans based on the intensity of the data samples associated with each of the one or more scans;
generating a first correlation based on the average intensity with respect to a number of data samples making up each of the one or more scans;
comparing the first correlation to a second correlation, wherein the second correlation is based on sensor data collected during a second additive manufacturing operation performed by a second additive manufacturing device or the first additive manufacturing device; and
calibrating the first additive manufacturing device using the comparison of the first and second correlations.
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extracting a heating rate, cooling rate and the average intensity associated with the energy impacting the metal powder from the sensor data.
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comparing an internal grain structure of parts produced by both the first and second additive manufacturing operations to verify the calibration of the first additive manufacturing device.
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This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/282,822, filed Sep. 30, 2016; which claims priority to U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/235,232, filed Sep. 30, 2015. The disclosures of which are hereby incorporated by reference in their entirety and for all purposes.
Additive manufacturing, or the sequential assembly or construction of a part through the combination of material addition and applied energy, takes on many forms and currently exists in many specific implementations and embodiments. Additive manufacturing can be carried out by using any of a number of various processes that involve the formation of a three dimensional part of virtually any shape. The various processes have in common the sintering, curing or melting of liquid, powdered or granular raw material, layer by layer using ultraviolet light, high powered laser, or electron beam, respectively. Unfortunately, established processes for determining a quality of a resulting part manufactured in this way are limited. Conventional quality assurance testing generally involves post-process measurements of mechanical, geometrical, or metallurgical properties of the part, which frequently results in destruction of the part. While destructive testing is an accepted way of validating a part's quality, as it allows for close scrutiny of various internal features of the part, such tests cannot for obvious reasons be applied to a production part. Consequently, ways of non-destructively and accurately verifying the mechanical, geometrical and metallurgical properties of a production part produced by additive manufacturing are desired.
An overall object of this invention is to apply optical sensing techniques to additive manufacturing processes involving the addition of thermal energy with a scanning heat source for the purpose of quality inference, process control, or both. Optical sensors can be used to track the evolution of in-process physical phenomena by tracking the evolution of their associated in-process physical variables. Herein optical can include that portion of the electromagnetic spectrum which include near infrared and well as near ultraviolet. Generally, the optical spectrum is considered to go from 380 nm to 740 nm in terms of wavelength. However near UV and near IR could extend as low as 1 nm and as high as 1000 nm in terms of wavelength respectively.
Another object of this invention to enable an optical sensing system to identify, examine, and analyze features associated with a heat source from two different process conditions and determine if they are largely similar or very different. The optical sensing system can be used to identify, examine, and analyze features associated with the material response to a heat input associated with two different process conditions to determine if they are largely similar or very different. The optical sensors can be used to interrogate a wide range of properties of the process including but not limited to in-process physical behaviors that will impact the metallurgical integrity, the mechanical properties, or the geometric shape of the article thus manufactured.
It is a further object of this invention to enable an optical sensing process together with suitable feature extraction to discern and distinguish various process conditions based on their associated characteristic times, for example, to the extent that the characteristic times and other dimensional or dimensionless parameters delineate different regimes of behavior, the optical sensing system and associated feature extraction methods will have sufficient resolution and accuracy to distinguish these same regimes of behavior.
Another object of this invention is to determine if process features from the slower material response to the heat input and associated with a given process condition are largely similar to those associated with a known baseline process condition and therefore considered nominal or very different from that baseline condition and therefore considered off-nominal.
It is a further object of this invention to derive process features from these thermal data gathered on these two very different timescales.
It is still a further object of this invention to apply such optical sensing and feature extraction methodologies to instances in which there are multiple beams, or where a single beam has been divided into several heat sources.
The disclosure will be readily understood by the following detailed description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals designate like structural elements.
It should be first recognized that additive manufacturing is directly dependent on three sets of properties. These properties are interrelated and they interact in a highly non-linear manner to either result in an acceptable part with acceptable metallurgical and geometric properties, or alternatively result in a part which is deficient in some manner with respect to metallurgical properties, geometric properties, or some combination of both. These specific three sets of properties are now delineated: (1) INTRINSIC MATERIAL PROPERTIES. These are the properties of the alloy that comprises the powders being used in the additive manufacturing process. Examples of such properties include melting range, vaporization range, specific heat, thermal conductivity, density, composition, latent heats of melting and vaporization, etc.; (2) EXTRINSIC POWDER BED PROPERTIES. Although the alloy has its own intrinsic properties as outlined above, the powder bed will have additional extrinsic properties which could vary from run to run or from one batch of powder to another, even if the alloy composition and all other intrinsic properties are identical. Examples of such extrinsic properties include particle size distribution, particle shape and morphology, particle surface area, particle contamination and thickness of oxide layer, packing density/powder bed density, etc.; and (3) PROCESS PROPERTIES. These are the myriad of properties that characterize the physical manufacturing process irrespective of intrinsic alloy properties and extrinsic powder properties. Examples of these properties include spatial beam power distribution, beam spot size, temporal variations in the beam if any, the environment in the processing chamber (gas or vacuum), beam travel speed and scan strategy of the beam rastering, properties of the beam optics (optical or magnetic/electrostatic), the method for application of sequential layers of powder, also known as recoating, the preheat of the powder bed if any, the macro level cooling and heat sinking to remove thermal energy from the processing chamber, etc.
It should be noted that there are critical in-process physical behaviors which occur during the additive manufacturing process which together with the three sets of properties listed above determine elements of the outcome of the process. These categories of physical behaviors may be separated into behaviors occurring on-heating and on-cooling.
For material heating, the various physical mechanisms or behaviors involved include: (1) Physics and attributes of beam and process conditions including: beam size, spatial beam power distribution (Gaussian, tophat, etc), temporal beam power distribution (continuous, pulsed, modulated, etc), and translational velocity of beam with respect to material; (2) Beam-material interaction including: Preheating, done intentionally as is the case of electron beam or occurs dynamically as the beam moves over the powder bed and material directly in front of the beam heats and expands before the beam actually gets there due to thermal conduction “wave” in front of beam, But for most cases of interest, the moving heat source in additive manufacturing is “supersonic” with respect to the heat conduction time, i.e. the heat source is moving faster than the speed of heat conduction, Absorption of energy at an atomistic level, For photons energy absorption depends on micro and macro optical properties of the material such as reflectivity and absorptivity, as well as non-imaging concentration effects due to the surface irregularities of the powder bed, as well as interactions between the incoming photons and the vapor or plasma generated by previous heating events, For electrons, the energy absorption depends on the atomic number of the material absorbing the energy, its density, and the kinetic energy of the incident electrons;
(3) Rapid heating and melting involving: The powders thus irradiated are rapidly heated and they undergo phase transformation as they melt, Particle size distribution dictates rates which the top surface particles vaporize, Unmelted or small droplets of melted material could be ejected as well from the irradiated region—this is extensively observed in practice, and Melting will most likely occur at local, incipient sites such as tops of particles, in the crevices between particles where photons get optically concentrated through non-imaging concentration, etc.; (4) Material consolidation—a very complex phenomenon which depends on many factors including: Layer thickness of material to be consolidated—the amount of material to be consolidated vs. the amount of joules deposited by the moving heat source during the beam interaction time; Particle size distribution, which can be used to determine both thermal conductivity of the powder bed as well as the possible occurrence of porosity; Packing density—this physical attribute determines the thermal conductivity of the power bed; Surface energy characteristics and wetting of unmelted powders below the weld pool by incipient liquid; Capillary forces—this is mainly characterized by the interplay between surface tension and viscosity; Rayleigh-type consolidation mechanisms, i.e. assuming a low viscosity fluid, looking only at the interplay of inertial and surface tension effects to restore equilibrium liquid shape/consolidate particles; and Larger scale hydrodynamic forces—if a fully developed weld pool emerges then there could be several forces that could come into play including inertial, surface tension, and temperature coefficient of surface tension (Marangoni effects); (5) On-cooling physical behaviors could include the following: rapid solidification—generally the solidification behavior of melts in an AM process will be very fast and will not necessarily follow the phase equilibria as outlined in an equilibrium phase diagram. In other words, the contour lines delineating phase boundaries such as the liquidus or solidus lines could have different locations in a temperature vs. composition space, for example, Residual stress—any time when there is a non-linear cooling profile as there will be in the case of additive manufacturing, there will arise thermal stresses. As the material cools and the strength of the material gradually increases, some of these thermal stresses could be “locked in” and result in residual stresses, Distortion—a closely related concept to residual stress, distortion is the elastic or plastic deformation of material under the action of thermal and residual stresses. It can result in irrecoverable displacement and bulk movement of material thereby changing the final shape of the component and creating deviations from the intended shape.
It should be still further recognized that for additive manufacturing processes there are process inputs that are controllable or are otherwise user-selectable. Many of these are identical to the process properties discussed above. Examples of such user controllable inputs include the following: Power, Travel speed, Focal and spatial energy distribution characteristics, BAM—beam active parameter—or how focal characteristics change with depth, Deflection and scan methods by lasers and electron beams. Laser deflection and scan methods include: Details and construction of the scan head, Galvanometer controls, F-theta lens or other focal lenses or strategies, Other mirrors or filters, and Dichroic mirrors or coatings, if any. Electron beam deflection and scan methods include: Deflection frequency, Magnetic deflection and focusing, Electrostatic deflection and focusing, Anode—cathode geometry, Electron gun type and design, Thermionic filament, type and geometry; Temporal energy distribution that include CW—continuous wave, Pulsed, Q-switched and otherwise modulated over time. Beam control can also include scan strategies that include choices of hatch spacing, hatch pattern and interlayer hatch pattern rotation angle. In some embodiments, multiple beams can be controlled. When multiple independently controlled lasers are being controlled, each with its own scan head, acting either completely independently or in coordination with other independent laser heads. In some cases, a very fast scan head with low inertia galvanometers can be used to create multiple “hot spots” with the same laser beam by “multiplexing” or fractionally and proportionally dividing the laser amongst the various hot spots. When multiple electron beams are being controlled, the ability to deflect charged particles at very high rates allows the creation of multiple hot spots from a single higher power electron beam and to modulate these precisely over any arbitrary temporal pattern as well as a controllable spatial pattern.
For the physical phenomena associated with additive manufacturing, it is useful to consider various characteristic times which could be associated with the various physical phenomena. There are many examples of manufacturing processes involving the addition of heat on a relatively rapid timescale and the response of the material over a relatively slower timescale. For example, consider the autogenous welding of a part (i.e. no addition of material) comprising a scanning heat source moving rapidly over the joint between the two metal surfaces to be joined. Assume that the diameter of the heat source is D and the travel speed of the heat source is V. Therefore, the characteristic time of interaction between the heat source and the pieces of metal to be joined is described by the following equation:
It is seen that for very small D and very large V, this characteristic time of interaction of the heat source with the workpiece can be very small. For example, in laser powder bed additive manufacturing processes like direct metal laser sintering (DMLS) and SLS (selective laser sintering), the diameter of the heat source could be 0.1 mm or smaller, and the scanning speed of the heat source could be 1000 mm/s or faster, and therefore the characteristic interaction time of the heat source with the workpiece could be much less than 1 ms and could be close to 100 microseconds.
With respect to the material response, for the aforementioned laser powder bed processes, the material response will be dominated by heat conduction. The characteristic time for heat conduction is given by the following equation:
Where X is a characteristic length over which heat conduction occurs, and a is the thermal diffusivity of the material. For many metals, the thermal diffusivity is on the order of 10−6 to 10−8 m2/s. The appropriate characteristic distance to assume would be the powder layer thickness. But in general it is experimentally observed that the material below the powder layer is also re-melted, and therefore a larger characteristic distance is not unwarranted. If we take the characteristic distance to be the same as the beam diameter which is assumed to be 100 microns, and if we examine the range of thermal diffusivities, then the characteristic times for the material response is on the order of 2.5 milliseconds on the fast end to 0.25 seconds on the slow end. Therefore, it is seen that the characteristic time for the heat source—material interaction is 25 to 2500 times faster than the time required for the heat to diffuse away from the hot region into the surrounding material.
This is a universally observed phenomenon for rapid thermal processes such as laser welding, electron beam welding, and even many arc welding processes where the travel speed of the arc is high or the energy density of the arc is high. This is also a prevalent process condition for many additive manufacturing processes that arte based on lasers and electron beams and involve the addition of material either through a sequentially layered and melted or sintered powder bed or the direct addition of material through wire fed by a mechanical wire feeder or powder being fed by a nozzle where the powder may by fluidized, carried, or otherwise entrained in an inert gas stream.
There are also other characteristic times which will influence the consolidation of the powder bed and the possible occurrence of defects. The two most important such timescales relating to various fluid phenomenon are those governed by capillary effects and those governed by inertial effects. The capillary or viscous timescale associated with the breakup or consolidation of a Newtonian Fluid is given by:
Where η is the dynamic viscosity, L is a characteristic length for the process, and σ is the surface tension of the liquid metal. For a characteristic length of 100 microns and assuming representative values of viscosity and surface tension for metals, we find that the capillary time is generally less than 1 microsecond.
Another important time scale is associated with the Rayleigh time, or the time scale associated with a low viscosity fluid being acted upon by inertial and surface tension forces. For example, this time scale governs the breakup or consolidation of droplets, or the time scale associated with the return of a fluid surface to equilibrium after a disturbance, assuming viscosity is a negligible effect as compared to inertial and surface tension forces. The equation for the Rayleigh time is given by:
Where ρ is the fluid density, σ is the surface tension, and L is a characteristic length scale. Again taking L to be 100 microns and assuming typical physical properties for molten metals, we get that the Rayleigh time is on the order of tens to hundreds of microseconds. This is a lot longer than the capillary time, but still shorter than the heat conduction time. So generally for the conditions which could be expected in additive manufacturing, it is found that:
tmaterial response>tRayleigh>tCapillary (5)
This means that generally the consolidation mechanisms of the molten material are faster than the heat conduction time, and therefore the process is dominated even on heating by heat conduction and not fluid effects. This also means that the width of the molten region at a given power level and beam diameter is also dominated by the heat conduction time.
Other thermal—related times of interest and significance are the adiabatic melting time and the adiabatic vaporization time. These are measures of how long it would take to melt and to vaporize a quantity of material in the absence of all thermal losses such as heat conduction. The adiabatic heating time is given by:
Where D is the beam diameter, d is the material layer thickness of powder to be sintered, ρpowder is the powder bed density, CP,solid is the average specific heat capacity of the solid powder, ΔTmelt is the temperature difference between room temperature and the melting point of the material (in deg. K), Lmelt is the latent heat of melting, E is the coupling efficiency of the beam to the material, and Pbeam is the beam power. In an entirely analogous manner, the adiabatic vaporization time is given by the following expression:
Where D is the beam diameter, d is the material layer thickness of powder to be sintered, ρpowder is the powder bed density, CP,solid is the average specific heat capacity of the solid powder, ΔTmelt is the temperature difference between room temperature and the melting point of the material (in deg. K), Lmelt is the latent heat of melting, CP, liquid is the average specific heat capacity of the liquid, ΔTvapor is the temperature difference between the melting point of the material and the vaporization point of the material) in deg. K), Lvapor is the latent heat of vaporization, E is the coupling efficiency of the beam to the material, and Pbeam is the beam power. Assuming thermophysical properties of nickel as an example, these various times are 3 microseconds for the adiabatic melting time, and 30 microseconds for the adiabatic vaporization time respectively.
Yet another time which is associated with cooling in the immediate vicinity of the molten region. This characteristic time is the local solidification time. It is given by:
Where ΔTmelt is the temperature difference between room temperature and the melting point of the material (in deg. K),
is the maximum cooling rate which could be measured for an individual scan by a stationary sensor, for example, V is the beam travel velocity, and
is the maximum thermal gradient at the liquid solid boundary, which could be measured through sensors looking down or in parallel with the optical train in a laser-based system, for example. For many of the cases of interest for metal AM, this local solidification time could be less than 1 millisecond but greater than 100 microseconds.
Yet still another time which could have relevance to the evolution of distortion and residual stress within the process is the thermal relaxation time for the part, which is given by:
Where L is a characteristic length for the part being printed and a is the thermal diffusivity of the material. For example if the characteristic length is a millimeter to a centimeter then this characteristic relaxation time could be on the order of 2.5 to 250 seconds. This is the timeframe over which thermal relaxation occurs over macroscopic lengths.
For manufacturing processes such as those discussed above that add heat and that achieve significant temperatures such that there are radiative emissions coming from the process, another mode of sensing is spectroscopy. The radiation that is thus emitted is both blackbody radiation as well as characteristic radiation. The blackbody radiation is a function of the temperature of the process and is governed by Planck's Equation:
Where I is the intensity of radiation emitted per unit time per unit area normal to the emitting surface, T is the absolute temperature of the surface in degrees Kelvin, h is the Planck constant, k is the Boltzmann Constant, c is the Speed of Light, and ν is the frequency of the radiation emitted. The relationship between the absolute temperature and the wavelength of the maximum emitted radiation is given by Wien's Displacement Law:
Where b is a constant.
Furthermore there are several physical phenomena that can be considered as the radiated energy leaves the hot region, propagates through space, arrives at the sensor, is collected by the sensor, and is converted into an electrical signal. These physical phenomena include, but are not limited to: spectral response of the sensor, frequency of the sensor, field of view of the sensor, distance between the sensor and heat source/material interaction, characteristics of optical components in optical path of the sensor.
In addition to the blackbody radiation which is a function of temperature, there are characteristic radiation peaks in the spectral data which are due to photons emitted as a result of specific electronic transitions between quantum states of atoms excited by multi-photon processes or by direct electron collisions. These are called characteristic because they are characteristic to a particular atom and ionization state(s). These will manifest in the spectral data as specific peaks at specific wavelengths. There will often be multiple peaks associated with various elements and electronic transitions, and as a result this spectral data can quickly get very complex.
If the integration times of the spectrometer as well as the incident beam time of the laser were absolutely identical and the spectrometer always saw optical emissions for a given fixed time when the laser was within the field of view of the spectrometer, and if the same chemical species were present in the vaporized plume in the same atomic percentages, then the absolute value of the intensity of the optical emission at a given characteristic spectral line could be used as an indicator of energy coupling to the powder bed. However the following intervening factors prevent the use of the absolute value of spectral peaks as a feature that could be used to gage the extent of energy coupling between the incident energy beam and the powder bed during an additive manufacturing process:
As a result of these and possibly other intervening factors, it is desirable to select another feature that could allow the characteristic spectral data to be used as a discriminator to see when the energy coupling between the laser or electron beam and the powder bed may be optimal. The FFT—Fast Fourier Transform—of the spectral data will indicate where any given spectrum is undergoing more rapid change in value. When there is a greater atomic concentration of a given excited neutral or ionized species in the plume above the energy beam/powder bed interaction zone and these species are emitting characteristic radiation, it is expected that the corresponding spectral peaks will be sharper and will therefore have higher values of FFT intensity at a given inverse wavelength. Conversely, when the characteristic emissions are lower due to the fact that there are relatively fewer excited species due to a more optimal energy coupling, then the relative peak at a given wavelength will be broader and the background blackbody radiation will play a more dominant role in the spectral intensity at that given wavelength. Therefore the FFT intensity peak under such conditions at the same inverse wavelength would be lower than that observed otherwise. Therefore the FFT intensity at some intermediate inverse wavelength (which will depend on the alloy composition) could serve as an indicator of the relative coupling efficiency of the incident energy beam to the workpiece.
Additive manufacturing processes may be symbolically represented as a logical operator which acts on four distinct sets:
When it comes to process sensing of any kind, whether it is optical or non-optical, the sensor data tells us something about the in-process physical behaviors and their current state, state of evolution, or the cumulative results of past states. However these physical behaviors cannot be measured directly; they can be characterized by their associated set of in-process variables. This reality is further illustrated in
Associated with each physically measurable manifestation 202 of the in-process variables 201, there could be both direct sensor measurements 203 as well as indirect sensor measurements 204 which characterize the specific physical manifestation 202 for each in-process variables 201. It is therefore seen that there are two levels of uncertainty and potential lack of either measurement resolution or accuracy. The in-process variables 201 cannot be directly measured but only the physical manifestations 202 of these variables can be measured. At the next level of uncertainty, there may not always exist direct sensor measurements 203 of these physical manifestations 202, and a series of indirect sensor measurements 204 may have to be used instead. In either event, the set of direct sensor measurements 203 and indirect sensor measurements 204 in turn comprise the aggregated set of in-process raw sensor data 205.
From this raw sensor data 205, it is possible to extract a multitude of reduced order process features 206 using a multiplicity of feature extraction techniques. For the purposes of this discussion “reduced order” refers to one or more of the following aspects: data compression, i.e. less data in the features as compared to the raw data; data reduction, i.e. a systematic analysis of the raw data which yields process metrics or other figures of merit; data aggregation, i.e. the clustering of data into discrete groupings and a smaller set of variables that characterize the clustering as opposed to the raw data itself; data transformation, i.e. the mathematical manipulation of data to linearly or non-linearly map the raw data into another variable space of lower dimensionality using a transformation law or algorithm; or any other related such techniques which will have the net effect of reducing data density, reducing data dimensionality, reducing data size, transforming data into another reduced space, or all of these either effected simultaneously.
Once these feature extraction methods 206 have been applied to the raw sensor data 205, the results could be sent to a classifier 207 which is capable of grouping the results as being either nominal 208 or off-nominal 209. The classifier 207 could use a plurality of classification methods including, but not limited to: statistical classification, both single and multivariable; heuristic based classifiers; expert system based classifiers; lookup table based classifiers; classifiers based simply on upper or lower control limits; classifiers which work in conjunction with one or more statistical distributions which could establish nominal vs off-nominal thresholds based on confidence intervals and/or a consideration f the degrees of freedom; or any other classification scheme 207 whether implicit or explicit which is capable of discerning whether a set of feature data 206 is nominal 208 or off-nominal 209. For the purposes of this discussion, “nominal” will mean a set of process outcomes which were within a pre-defined specification, which result in post-process measured attributes of the parts thus manufactured falling within a regime of values which are deemed acceptable, or any other quantitative, semi-quantitative, objective, or subjective methodology for establishing an “acceptable” component.
It is seen that the critical utility of any in-process data, features, and associated classification lies in the ability to discern nominal vs. off-nominal conditions. It is useful however to more closely examine precisely what it means to declare a set of process outcomes as “nominal” based on the results of in-process data and associated analysis by examining the flowchart as described in
Alternatively, another series of steps could be undertaken to assess the results of the in-process physical behaviors 301. For example, post-process inspection data 308 could be collected using a wide variety of non-destructive or destructive post-process inspection techniques. As a critical and closely associated step with collecting such post-process inspection data 308, there could be calibration steps and data 309 or setup artifacts and associated data 310. These are two enabling sets of data or physical objects which help to improve the accuracy or resolution of the post-process data set 308. Then in an exactly analogous manner to the in-process case, data reduction or feature extraction 311 can take place so that the raw post-process data 308 can be turned into sets of reduced order post-process features 311. These features are provided to a post-process classifier 312 in exactly the same manner that the in-process features 306 were provided to the in-process classifier 307.
For both post-process and in-process classifiers (312 and 307 respectively) it is generally not possible a priori to separate the set of process outcomes 314 into nominal 315 or off-nominal 316 subsets. In general, there can exist some a posteriori data, expert knowledge, or some other historical and/or training data set or set 313 which would enable the classifiers 312 and 307 to act upon their respective feature sets 311 and 306 so as to separate the set of process outcomes 314 into nominal 315 and off-nominal 316 subsets.
In the context of this present invention, one of the main objectives and aims is to establish how in-process metrics could be used to classify process outcomes as nominal or off-nominal. Currently in manufacturing processes including additive manufacturing, only post process part acceptance methods are used. The overall methodology of post-process inspection is explained in greater detail in
Now coming to the various methods of measuring, validating and verifying the three categories of properties described above, there are destructive and non-destructive methods, as well as in-process and post-process methods. For example in the evaluation of metallurgical properties 401, the most common methods involve the use of destructive evaluation techniques based on Metallography 404, or the microscope analysis of material structure. Alternatively, it is possible to use an in-process approach 405. In this in-process approach 405, data from the Additive Manufacturing Process is collected in-situ either continuously, intermittently, or at specific discrete intermediate states during the manufacture of the Article. Then features are extracted from this in-process data. The extracted features are then further correlated to microstructural features, and the ability of the in-process features to predict the corresponding microstructural features is validated and verified. Once this validation and verification is completed, then the in-process approach 405 can become predictive of metallurgical properties 401. The methods for testing and evaluating Mechanical Properties 402 usually involve destructive methods of Post Process Destructive Mechanical Testing 406. Such methods involve a wide variety of testing methods and equipment at a wide range of strain rates, loading rates, and thermal conditions.
Finally coming to the methods and techniques for evaluating the Geometric Properties 403, the most common is the use of Post Process Dimensional Inspection 407. This could be accomplished using a variety of measurement instruments which could be simple gages, contact geometrical measurement machines such as CMMs—coordinate measurement machines, or non-destructive geometric measurement methods such as CAT scanning—Computer Aided Tomography, or various optical scanning techniques which are also non-contact. Alternatively there is a body of techniques which is the subject of this present invention, namely in-process characterization of geometric properties 408. In such in-process characterization 408, first data is collected from a variety of sensors. Then features are extracted from this data which can be correlated to the Geometric Properties 403 of the Article. The data collected and the associated features extracted may be collected continuously, intermittently, or at specific discrete intermediate states occurring during the manufacture of the Article. Lastly, there is a verification and validation step in which in-process data 408 are compared to post process inspection data 407 to verify that the in-process data 408 is capable of verifying the Geometric Properties 403 correspond to Design Intent 400.
Therefore in order to be used in a quality inference or process control scheme, in-process metrics and features derived from in-process data can correlate in some fashion to metrics and features derived from post-process inspection and evaluation methods. So to integrate and expand upon all of the concepts shown in previous figures and discussed above, some embodiments of the present invention utilize a correlative classifier that combines in-process classifiers and post-process classifiers into a unified classifier that enables in-process data to be predictive of post-process measured properties or attributes of a component. This is schematically shown in
In
All of these factors 500-504 are collectively the inputs for the additive manufacturing process 505 which could also include post-processes such as heat treatment or hot isostatic pressing (HIP). Therefore the definition of manufacturing process herein is not just limited to the additive manufacturing process itself but could include additional post-process steps. The manufacturing process 505 is characterized by in-process behaviors 506. These in-process behaviors 506 have associated with them in-process variables 507. As previously discussed these variables 507 may not be directly observable but their physically observable manifestations 508 will be detectable by direct or indirect sensor measurements 509. These measurements 509 will generate a large volume of raw in-process data 510. Then through a variety of algorithmic methods, a set or multiple sets of in-process features 511 are derived.
The manufacturing process 505 itself will produce process outcomes 512 which could be for example acceptable part, unacceptable part, excessive porosity, etc. These process outcomes 512 can be characterized by the in-process features 511 but can also be characterized by post-process inspection and evaluation techniques 513-515. These techniques include metallurgical inspections 513, mechanical inspections 514 which examine mechanical properties, and geometric inspections 525 which aim to measure part geometry. The results of all of these post-process measurements can be stored in a post-process database 516 that correlates the post-process results to the controllable process inputs 500. This is typically what constitutes expert process knowledge in the way additive manufacturing or any other manufacturing process is conducted at present. Similarly, a database of in-process features 517 could be established which correlates the in-process features 511 to the controllable process inputs 500 which resulted in the process outcomes 512 which generated the in-process features 511.
Some embodiments of the present invention then establish a correlative classifier and a logical model 518 which utilizes the data from both the post-process 516 and the in-process 517 databases. This classifier and logic model 518 has four principal functions:
As a result of step 4 described above, the correlative classifier 518 can become predictive of process outcomes 512 based on in-process feature data 511. This state is shown in 519. The method by which in-process data and associated in-process features could become predictive of process outcomes as well as part quality has been described in detail above. Now it is instructive to examine the types and categories of sensor data which could be possible within the context of additive manufacturing. At the highest level of consideration, the following sensors are possible and the physical behaviors they could measure are listed in the table below.
SENSOR
PHYSICAL BEHAVIORS IT COULD
CATEGORY
SENSORS
MEASURE
Force and
Accelerometers
The uniformity of the powder addition process
vibration
vibration sensors
which typically involves a mechanical arm that
mechanical shock
spreads the powders. Any irregularities in the
sensors
arm, the mechanical motion, the spreading action,
strain gauges
or the arm hitting previously deposited layers
piezoelectric sensors
could be important to indicate possible non-
uniformities in the powder bed as a result of errors
in this mechanical spreading action.
Contact
thermocouples
The powder bed temperature as well as other
thermal
thermistors
temperatures in the equipment, the processing
resistance thermal
chamber, or other aspects of the manufacturing
detectors (RTDs)
process could be sensed and detected with these
sensors. This kind of data is valuable to know the
macro thermal state of the process, including
preheating, as well as for machine diagnostics and
preventative maintenance for the machine itself
Non-contact
single color
These sensors measure both process as well as
thermal
pyrometer
ambient powder bed temperatures and could do so
two or multi-color
in the frame of reference of the laser or in a
pyrometer
stationary reference frame. They can measure
Non-contact
thermal imaging
very fast thermal transients associated with
thermal
camera
heating, melting and cooling as well as slower
ratio pyrometers
thermal transients at longer timescales as was
fiber optic
discussed previously.
pyrometers
Optical
photodiode
These sensors could again be in a moving or a
spectrometer
fixed reference frame. Photodiodes measure
intensity of light emissions over a given range of
wavelengths and could be correlated to such
features as weld pool size and/or temperature.
They could also detect anomalies such as regions
where the laser power absorption suddenly
changes, or areas where the power absorbed
otherwise fluctuates. Spectrometers can also
perform chemical analysis of the vaporized and
either ionized or unionized plasmas or vapors
associated with the additive manufacturing
process
Optical
high speed camera
These types of sensors could be used again in the
camera
frame of reference of the beam or in a stationary
linear camera
frame. They could measure such things as weld
other optical imaging
pool size and shape, the shape and precise
systems
metrology of the layer just deposited, irregularities
in the manufacturing process, the integrity of the
powder bed as new powder layers are applied, as
well as other nominal and off-nominal process
conditions
Other
laser ultrasonic
This category of sensors involves other or
eddy current
multiple physical phenomena. For example the
ultrasonic
laser ultrasonic could involve a laser
acoustic emission
interferometer which could directly interrogate the
manufacturing process, or in conjunction with an
excitation source could be used to directly
measure mechanical properties of the deposit as
the process build is occurring. Eddy current
sensors can similarly measure the integrity of the
build if they are swept over the built up part.
Similarly it may be possible to perform in-situ
ultrasonic measurements. Acoustic emission
measurements may be sensitive to high speed
metallurgical phenomena such as dislocation
motion and cracking and would be attached to the
base of the part being built up
These sensors and some of their possible configurations are shown in
Additionally, there could be contact sensors 613 on the mechanical device 612 which spreads the powders. These sensors could be accelerometers, vibration sensors, etc. Lastly there could be other types of sensors 614. These could include contact sensors such as thermocouples to measure macro thermal fields or could include acoustic emission sensors which could detect cracking and other metallurgical phenomena occurring in the deposit as it is being built. These contact sensors can be utilized during the powder addition process characterize the operation of the mechanical device 612, which can also be referred to as a recoater arm. Accordingly, non-uniformities in the surface of the spread powder can be detected and addressed by the system. Rough surfaces resulting from the powder spreading process can be characterized in order to repeat the powder spreading process in order to reduce or eliminate non-uniformities in the surface of the spread powder. In one implementation, a peak in the spread powder can be fused by the heat source, resulting in the subsequent layer of powder having a corresponding peak. At some point, the peak could contact the recoater arm, potentially damaging the recoater arm and resulting in additional spread powder non-uniformity. Accordingly, embodiments of the present invention can detect the non-uniformities in the spread powder before they result in non-uniformities in the manufactured part. One of ordinary skill in the art would recognize many variations, modifications, and alternatives.
Acoustic emission sensors operating, for example, in the range of 100 kHz to 400 kHz, can detect material properties that produce these high frequency acoustic emissions, for example, cracking of the sample. In-process acoustic emission thus provides insight into material properties that are not available using conventional techniques. As another example, heating and cooling rates can be measured using acoustic emission sensors based on material changes that produce high frequency acoustic emissions. Accordingly, embodiments of the present invention can measure defects being created in the material in real time using in-process measurements. In some embodiments, the acoustic emission sensors can be coupled to the build plate whereas in other embodiments, the sensors can be moved to contact solidified elements of the manufactured part to measure portions of the manufactured part as the powder bed moves away from the build plate. This method would also be applicable to thermocouples, thermistors, RTDs, and other sensors represented by 614.
In the case of an electron beam system,
One specific sensor configuration which could be useful in practice is shown in
To increase the productivity of an additive manufacturing process, it may be desirable to have multiple heat sources. One possible configuration is shown in
Irrespective of the sensor configurations and irrespective of whether or not there are multiple or single heat sources or energy beams, all of the in-process raw data can be processed such that features could be extracted from this raw data. The table below outlines the possible categories of feature extraction methods and techniques. The overall purpose of a feature extraction method is to reduce the size or dimensionality of a time-based raw data set by assigning features represent key physical characteristics and attributes of the original signal but by using reduced order representations.
CATEGORY
EXAMPLES AND DESCRIPTION
Time based
These are techniques that look at the attributes of a signal
methods
as a function of time or over time. Simple control limits
are examples, as are moving averages, other statistical
moment functions acting directly on time-based data, or a
many possible feature descriptors which could describe
the envelope of the signal intensity vs. time curve
Frequency
These involve the mathematical transformation of time-
based
based data into a frequency domain using such
methods
transformation techniques as the Fourier Transform or
numerical variants of that such as the Fast Fourier
Transform or FFT. The essential premise here is that time
based data could be represented as a summation of
different sinusoidal or otherwise oscillatory signals with
different weighting factors.
Time-
Examples of these methods are the broad category of
frequency
Wavelet transforms. The fundamental premise of these
methods
techniques is to examine the frequency content of a signal
as it evolves over time. Q
Heuristic
Various figures of merit, dimensionless numbers, or any
methods
other manner of analysis that could result in sets of
features that are reduced order and that represent the
original time-based signal in some alternate space.
Other
Hybrid or ad hoc techniques which could be very specific
to the manufacturing process in question.
As an example of this last category of feature extraction methods, consider the following case which is specific to additive manufacturing and its unique peculiarities. In additive manufacturing that involves a scanning heat source on a powder bed either with a laser or an electron beam, there are specific patterns. For example in
If such a process were being monitored by a stationary photodiode, the data coming back to the photodiode would have many, many individual signals each representing a given specific scan over a specific path length. It would be useful to separate out all of these signals according to their path length, as the apparent intensity of the signal as observed by the photodiode will be a function of this path length. This is because at the start of the scan, the photodiode intensity is zero or very small because the laser has just turned on. As the scan proceeds the scan generally becomes hotter and emits more light, so the photodiode intensity would increase slightly. There would of course be a natural range and scatter in the photodiode raw signal as the light intensity varies throughout the process due to the very chaotic nature of the laser/powder interactions as well as the chaotic motion of the molten metal and the changing view factor from this small hot spot to the photodiode.
So it is seen that the number of data points in a given segment of photodiode data between a rise and fall event (i.e. time laser was on for a scan) is directly proportional to the scan length. It is possible therefore to plot all the photodiode data for all scan segments in the build as a function of the scan length, or correspondingly as a function of the number of data points in a given photodiode segment representing the data collected during a specific scan. In practice, there are not an infinite number of scan lengths used, and the same scan length may be used at many different locations in the part. Smaller scan lengths may be used for smaller geometrical features, and for larger features a larger scan length may be possible to speed up the build process. Embodiments of the present invention are, therefore, scan strategy agnostic. In other words, the effect of scan length is accounted for by the measurement of the number of data points collected. Machine to machine variations in scan strategy can be addressed using embodiments of the present invention since the scan length associated with each scan strategy is accounted for by the conversion to the number of samples in a scan illustrated in
Lastly is should be observed that there is no fundamental reason why this technique cannot be applied to processes that utilize electron beam heat sources, provided that they also employ scan strategies in which smaller regions of the build are scanned by a large number of short individual scan paths.
Referring once again to
Measurements of heating rates and cooling rates as a function of 3D position in the manufactured part can be made and utilized to determine the microstructure of the material during each of the scan lines. Thus, the heating and cooling rates at each 3D location in the build can be determined using embodiments of the present invention, which are not available using conventional techniques. As a result, using a stationary photodiode in some embodiments, a 3D map of heating and cooling rates can be compiled and then correlated with in-process and post-process material characterization data. Referring to
In some embodiments, a nominal value used to generate
Using a test pattern, such as the test pattern depicted in
The various aspects, embodiments, implementations or features of the described embodiments can be used separately or in any combination. Various aspects of the described embodiments can be implemented by software, hardware or a combination of hardware and software. The described embodiments can also be embodied as computer readable code on a computer readable medium for controlling manufacturing operations or as computer readable code on a computer readable medium for controlling a manufacturing line. The computer readable medium is any data storage device that can store data which can thereafter be read by a computer system. Examples of the computer readable medium include read-only memory, random-access memory, CD-ROMs, HDDs, DVDs, magnetic tape, and optical data storage devices. The computer readable medium can also be distributed over network-coupled computer systems so that the computer readable code is stored and executed in a distributed fashion.
The foregoing description, for purposes of explanation, used specific nomenclature to provide a thorough understanding of the described embodiments. However, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that the specific details are not required in order to practice the described embodiments. Thus, the foregoing descriptions of specific embodiments are presented for purposes of illustration and description. They are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the described embodiments to the precise forms disclosed. It will be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art that many modifications and variations are possible in view of the above teachings.
Campbell, Peter, Jacquemetton, Lars, Dave, Vivek R., Cola, Mark J., Wikle, Glenn, Madigan, R. Bruce, Castro, Alberto
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